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BNC: 37695 COCA: 26147

haw

2 ENTRIES FOUND:
haw /ˈhɑː/ verb
haws; hawed; hawing
haw
/ˈhɑː/
verb
haws; hawed; hawing
Learner's definition of HAW

hem and haw

see 3hem
BNC: 37695 COCA: 26147

haw

1 of 5

noun (1)

1
: a hawthorn berry
2

haw

2 of 5

noun (2)

: nictitating membrane
especially : an inflamed nictitating membrane of a domesticated mammal

haw

3 of 5

interjection

often used to indicate a vocalized pause in speaking

haw

4 of 5

verb (1)

hawed; hawing; haws

intransitive verb

1
: to utter the sound represented by haw
hemmed and hawed before answering
2
: equivocate
the administration hemmed and hawed over the students' demands

haw

5 of 5

verb (2)

hawed; hawing; haws

imperative verb

used as a direction to turn to the left
compare gee entry 3

intransitive verb

: to turn to the near or left side

Word History

Etymology

Noun (1)

Middle English hawe, going back to Old English haga, weak masculine noun, formally identical with haga "fence, fenced enclosure, hedge" (whence Middle English hawe in same sense), going back to Germanic *hagan- (whence also Middle Dutch hage "thornbush," haghe "thornbush forming a border," Old Icelandic hagi "enclosed field, pasture"), derivative of a base *hag- seen also in *haga-, masculine a-stem, whence Old English hæg- "enclosure" (in placenames), Old High German hag "palisade, enclosed land"; in *hagi-, masculine i-stem, whence Old English hege "hedge, fence, boundary wall" (whence Middle English heye, haie, in part reflecting also Anglo-French haie "hedge, fence"), Middle Low German hege; in *hagjō hedge entry 1; in *hagna-, masculine a-stem, derivative with the suffix of appurtenance -na-, whence Old Saxon hagan "thornbush, buckthorn," Middle Dutch haghen "enclosure," Old High German hagan "thornbush, plants of the genera Crataegus and Rhamnus"; Germanic hag- going back to dialectal Indo-European *kagh- "enclosure," whence also Celtic *kagi̯o- (whence Welsh cae "hedge, hedgerow, field," Cornish ke "hedge, ditch," Old Breton caiou glossing munimenta "defensive works, barrier," Breton kae "hedge, field") and probably Latin caulae, plural only, "railing, lattice forming a barrier" (going back to *kahelā)

Note: Old English haga in the sense "hawthorn berry" may have been extracted from hagaþorn hawthorn or an unattested compound with berie berry entry 1. Germanic *hag- "enclosure," with its numerous derivative stems, appears to have been intimately connected with the thorny plants such as Crataegus used to form hedges. — The northwest Indo-European etymon *kagh- "enclosure" has been associated with a verb of the same form meaning approximately "grasp, enclose," which is hypothetically the source of Umbrian kukehes "you (or s/he) will reach," Oscan kahad "s/he takes," as well as some of the forms of Welsh cael "to get, receive" (see Lexikon der indogermanischen Verben, 2. Auflage, p. 342). The Lexikon shows this form as both *kagh- and *ḱagh-, as *kagh- violates an Indo-European root structure constraint (though comparable forms in a satem language are lacking); a stricter laryngealist notation would be *ḱh2gh-. Also connected with this verb is Latin cohum "hollow in the middle of a yoke"—see inchoate. See also quay.

Noun (2)

Middle English howe, hawe "morbid excrescence in the eye," of uncertain origin

Verb (1)

derivative of haw entry 3

Verb (2)

probably from haw entry 3 used as a command to an animal

First Known Use

Noun (1)

before the 12th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1

Noun (2)

1523, in the meaning defined above

Interjection

1600, in the meaning defined above

Verb (1)

1632, in the meaning defined at sense 1

Verb (2)

1777, in the meaning defined at intransitive sense

Time Traveler
The first known use of haw was before the 12th century
BNC: 37695 COCA: 26147

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